Noyce talks Salt

Aussie director Phillip Noyce is back in the chair for the much anticipated spy thriller ”Salt”, which reunites him with his Bone Collector co-star Angelina Jolie. In this very exclusive interview with fellow Aussie PAUL FISCHER, Noyce talks at length about the film and how it changed from a Tom Cruise movie to a Angelina Jolie film.

QUESTION: The gestation of this movie has been a little bit strange. I mean, it went from a male lead character, segue into a female lead character. And it went through a whole sort of casting process. At which point were you involved, and at which point did it make that switch?

PHILIP NOYCE: I first became involved in 2006, when I discussed the project with folks over at Sony. But â€“ and after that discussion, Terry George worked on the script. Not with me attached. But, it wasnâ€™t until a year later that I went back to see the executives at Sony, and talk about the project again. In fact, in May of last year â€“ letâ€™s see which year are we talking about now? What year is it now?

QUESTION: Two-thousand-nine. [LAUGHTER]

PHILIP NOYCE: Okay, 2007 is when I first discussed it. But in May 2008, I went back to discuss it with them. And then we approached Tom Cruise. And in the script by Kurt Wimmer, the part, which was later, played by Angelina Jolie â€“ the character was called, at that time, Edwin A. Salt. And we discussed the film with Tom. We had a table read with various actors, including Samuel L. Jackson, who kindly played one of the parts, just so we could hear the script read. And after that table read, Amy Pascal and Ned Tullman decided they definitely wanted to make the film. It was then that â€“ you know, they just couldnâ€™t get Tom to commit. He had many projects on the boil. And around the time that Tom wasnâ€™t prepared to commit to the script as it was â€“ I mean, his main fears were that the character was too close to Ethan Hunt, being a rogue spy, with extraordinary abilities. And â€“ you know, over many months, we tried to twist and turn the story to differentiate the character of Edwin Salt from Ethan Hunt. But, you know, he had a valid point. It was kind of returning to an offshoot of a character that heâ€™d already played. Itâ€™s like playing the brother, or the cousin, of somebody that you played in another movie.

Then the project was in hiatus for a couple of weeks. And â€“ Amy Pascal had been talking â€“ over the years, had often spoken to Angelina Jolie. Theyâ€™d expressed their mutual respect for each other and also, their mutual desire to try and create a female spy franchise. And so we sent the script to Angelina. And then in September last year, Kurt Wimmer, myself, and the producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura, went to the South of France to visit Angelina at her home there, where she lives with her kids and Brad. And over several days, three or four days, we discussed our mutual visions for what the film could be, and how, if a male character was to be turned into a female character, how that would be achieved. And â€“ in that process, that process involved producing a script based on those discussions. And then that script being revised again by Brian Helgeland, who basically did a character pass, or dialogue pass on the film. But based on the script that came out of those discussions, Angelina committed.

QUESTION: Is the basic script youâ€™re shooting now the same as the Cruise script, in terms of plot structure, and that kind of thing?

PHILIP NOYCE: The script has been in development for many years, and there were many changes made before I became involved. And I think that itâ€™s just been a continual process, obviously accelerating by changing the central character. But the ideas â€“ the locomotive of ideas that drive the movie are the same. An undercover CIA operative is accused of being a Russian mole, and has to go on the run to defend themselves. And thatâ€™s been the same since day one. The tone of the film has changed in this evolution. In the same way, I guess, as â€“ you know– action thrillers have changed along the lines of the Bond film and the Bourne films. Bond used to be almost cartoonish. But now, you can take those Bond stories very seriously, on a dramatic and emotional level.

QUESTION: So, this has a more realistic edge to it?

PHILIP NOYCE: Yeah. So, this is like that, following the trend in action-adventure spy movies. It has evolved into a story where we hope at all times that the audience take seriously the emotional interplay between the characters, and are very, very involved on an emotional level with the story. As well as getting enormous thrills and spills, and all the other popcorn elements that youâ€™d hope to see in a summer movie.

QUESTION: Are you in your element making this kind of movie?

PHILIP NOYCE: Well, hereâ€™s the thing. Look. This movie is sort of a combination of every movie Iâ€™ve ever made, in a weird way. So, I was in my element, yeah. I mean, you know, this is a little bit of The Quiet American, in its complex morality. Itâ€™s a little bit of Clear and Present Danger, in its study of the CIA. Itâ€™s a little bit of The Bone Collector, just because it has Angelina Jolie as the star. Itâ€™s a little bit, even, of Newsfront, in as much as thereâ€™s a realistic or documentary edge to some parts of the movie. But the major thing the audience is going to find is that the movieâ€™s a showcase for the incredibly diverse talents of Angelina Jolie. And when I say â€œincrediblyâ€, thatâ€™s not an understatement. Incredibly diverse. I mean, as we know, sheâ€™s a brilliant dramatic actress. Without a doubt. Thatâ€™s been proven. But â€“ you know, sheâ€™s also, in Mr. and Mrs. Smith, and the Tomb Raider films, sheâ€™s shown that she can kick ass as good as any man. And in this film, she gets to do both. And she does both in a way that I think will startle audiences. Itâ€™s highly dramatic, itâ€™s highly emotional. Itâ€™s a thrill a minute. And people are going to be very, very surprised by what they see, and by what they see her do. As I have been. So, when you say, â€œAre you in your element?â€ You know, this has been such a ride with her. Coming back to work with an actress who was in her early 20s when I first worked with her, and is now in her early 30s. You know, to see the maturity is extraordinary, you know? Sheâ€™s a relative newcomer when she was in Bone Collector, which was her first film where sheâ€™s above the title, I might add. Alongside Denzel Washington, but still a relative newcomer. You know, she was just finding her feet. Now, ten years later, sheâ€™s absolutely in her prime as an actress, and as a film actress. Totally understanding the process of making movies, of telling stories, of reaching out to an audience, in a way that the greats do. You know. Harrison Ford is probably the greatest entertainer that Iâ€™ve ever worked with, as much as he had an innate understanding of his relationship to his audience, and his characterâ€™s relationship with the material. And that was a marvel, to watch him work. And so â€“ you know, making this film was a marvel to watch Angelina work. A woman with six children, often brought along to visit, and would be hanging out with the caravan. You know, a multiplicity of causes that she really does care about. And a movie that required her absolute unbinding attention, physically and mentally. And â€“ you know, she never seemed to falter. And that was quite remarkable, just to be around that kind of dedication and precision. You know, you see a person, a great athlete, whoâ€™s at the top of their game. I remember, I was a friend of Cathy Freeman when she won the gold medal, you know? And â€“ I mean, just to be around that kind of dedication, that kind of precision, that kind of honed to perfection kind of approach to what theyâ€™re doing â€“ is exciting. And marveling as well. You know, youâ€™re in awe. So, I had a great time.

QUESTION: Youâ€™ve been attached to some interesting things, and I donâ€™t know if any of these things are ever going to happen. It was interesting to me that at one point you were going to be directing Mary, Queen of Scots.

PHILIP NOYCE: With Scarlett Johansson. Well, that film was being financed by a company that essentially went broke. Notorious â€“ what were they called? They were doing David Russellâ€™s film. Anyway, the finances went bankrupt early last year.

QUESTION: What about American Pastoral? In fact, I was talking to Evan Rachel Wood on Monday who was once cast in that movie.

PHILIP NOYCE: Sheâ€™s too old now, but â€“ yeah. She was cast in it, years ago.

QUESTION: Will it happen?

PHILIP NOYCE: We could never find the right actor to play the lead, who could get the film made. I remain attached to it, and hope to make it. So, you know, thatâ€™s one like The Quiet American, which was in development with me for seven years. Itâ€™s one that Iâ€™ll come back to. The next film I am trying to make is Dirt Music. Dirt Music is the Tim Winton novel set in western Australia.

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